300 S.W. 665 | Tex. App. | 1927
This is a suit on a promissory note for $600, instituted by appellee against D. W. Smallwood, Mrs. William Smallwood, and George S. Harper. The court instructed a verdict for appellee.
Although the National Bank secured judgment in the lower court, and the appeal was perfected by George S. Harper, the style of the case is entered on the cover of the transcript and the statement of facts as though the bank was appellant and Harper and others were appellees. The statute is plain that, when a party appeals, he is called the "appellant" and the adverse party the "appellee," and the party suing out a writ of error is called the "plaintiff in error" and the adverse party the "defendant in error." Article 2252, Rev. Stats. 1925. A failure to follow the statute causes confusion and trouble in appellate courts, as it has in this case.
The note is a joint and several one and became due on December 19, 1925, but payment was extended by appellee to June 19, 1926. The note provides:
"The makers, sureties, and indorsers of this note hereby severally waive demand of payment, notice of nonpayment, protest, and notice of protest, and hereby consent that the time of payment may be extended from time to time, without notice, and without releasing them or either of them."
Harper was a surety on the note and testified that when it became due he instructed the cashier of the bank not to extend the time of payment of the note. *666
The provisions in the note as to waiver of notice, protest, and extensions were valid and binding. Contracts of suretyships are to be construed as other contracts, the surety having no greater right in the construction of his contract except that, as he derives no benefit from, the contract, he has the right to have it strictly construed. Brandt, Sur. and Guar. § 107. It is the general rule that an extension of time for payment given by the payee to the principal will release the surety, unless he consents to the same. Brandt, Sur. and Guar. § 376. The rule has no application when the contract has a provision for extensions without notice to the surety. Brandt, § 379; State Nat. Bank v. Vickery (Tex.Com.App.)
The case of Benson v. Phipps,
The judgment is affirmed.